Neil Young (1945) Canadian singer-songwriter
Only Love Can Break Your Heart
Song lyrics, After the Gold Rush (1970)
Source: The Whitsun Weddings
Neil Young (1945) Canadian singer-songwriter
Only Love Can Break Your Heart
Song lyrics, After the Gold Rush (1970)
Letitia Elizabeth Landon (1802–1838) English poet and novelist
The London Literary Gazette (7th March 1835)
Translations, From the German
Henri Barbusse book Under Fire
Under Fire (1916), Ch. 24 - The Dawn
Context: Waking, Paradis and I look at each other, and remember. We return to life and daylight as in a nightmare. In front of us the calamitous plain is resurrected, where hummocks vaguely appear from their immersion, the steel-like plain that is rusty in places and shines with lines and pools of water, while bodies are strewn here and there in the vastness like foul rubbish, prone bodies that breathe or rot.
Paradis says to me, "That's war."
"Yes, that's it," he repeats in a far-away voice, "that's war. It's not anything else."
He means — and I am with him in his meaning — "More than attacks that are like ceremonial reviews, more than visible battles unfurled like banners, more even than the hand-to-hand encounters of shouting strife, War is frightful and unnatural weariness, water up to the belly, mud and dung and infamous filth. It is befouled faces and tattered flesh, it is the corpses that are no longer like corpses even, floating on the ravenous earth. It is that, that endless monotony of misery, broken, by poignant tragedies; it is that, and not the bayonet glittering like silver, nor the bugle's chanticleer call to the sun!"
Paradis was so full of this thought that he ruminated a memory, and growled, "D'you remember the woman in the town where we went about a bit not so very long ago? She talked some drivel about attacks, and said, 'How beautiful they must be to see!'"
A chasseur who was full length on his belly, flattened out like a cloak, raised his bead out of the filthy background in which it was sunk, and cried, 'Beautiful? Oh, hell! It's just as if an ox were to say, 'What a fine sight it must be, all those droves of cattle driven forward to the slaughter-house!'
Example (musician) (1982) English rapper and singer
"Under the Influence" (song) <br class="br"> ("Under the Influence" on YouTube (with lyrics)) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4Ow3lFtNhI <br class="br">Studio albums, Playing in the Shadows (2011)
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772–1834) English poet, literary critic and philosopher
"Hymn in the Vale of Chamouni" (1802)
“Says she loves me
Yes, yes she does
Gonna show me tonight, yeah She got the way to move me, Cherry”
Neil Diamond (1941) American singer-songwriter
Cherry, Cherry
Song lyrics, The Feel of Neil Diamond (1966)
“Your naked body should only belong to those who fall in love with your naked soul.”
Charlie Chaplin (1889–1977) British comic actor and filmmaker
“When I tell him that Im falling in love
Why does he say
"Hush, hush, keep it down now.
Voices carry"?”
Aimee Mann (1960) American indie rock singer-songwriter (born 1960)
"Voices Carry"
Song lyrics, Voices Carry (1985)
Robert Patrick (playwright) (1937) Playwright, poet, lyricist, short story writer, novelist
Pouf Positive
Untold Decades: Seven Comedies of Gay Romance (1988)